kyleandhisIH
Member
Intro:
I'm 19 years old, attending my second semester of college, and I'm not satisfied that I made the right decisions.
First, a little background. I was a lego kid. I'm here, right? It all stemmed from innate ability to disassemble household appliances as quickly as possible. It was always great frustration for my Dad, who often didn't appreciate seeing his old pioneer in pieces on the floor.
Flash forward, and I'm a senior in high school, with the opportunity to learn to fly under cfi-mei don g, in a 2005 g1000-equipped c172sp. From what he could tell, it was the first program in the nation that offered highschool students actual logged flight time, Instead of just the ground-type classes (which he had previously taught) and this really changed my ideas about a career. No longer did I want to be a chemical engineer, I wanted to work in the aviation industry. Really, I want to work with and be knowledgeable concerning all types of powerplants and mechanical systems (and I guess learning about these new computer screens wouldn't hurt)
so now I'm into a pre-engineering program for the second semester, with initial plans to transfer into rolla's engineering college and specialize in mechanical apps. My first semester was not so good - I got good grades at first, especially in chem, but calculus was crippling. I tested above the refresher math course with act scores, and I have never had any trigonometry classes. Ultimately, I failed calculus and got a c in chem (because of a little slump of educational depression, translation: Lazy) and my gpa is now a 1.7.
This makes my scholarship (~$13,000 over 4 years) funding seem dicey, since they require a 3.0. Their holding period will last until the next fall semester, however, so I have this semester and all summer to make up my grades.
Now the problem:
I don't want to be an engineer, after finding out from my "career advisor" that my intended career path was not what this engineering degree would point towards. That probably didn't help me motivate myself to succeed, and neither did his hearty laughter when I told him I was having trouble in calculus.
Appointed advisors are awesome. Anyhow, I have recently looked into an out-of-state school ($$$$$$^2 if they don't have some kind of shared-border agreement with mo) that has a two-year a&p certification (not incredibly valuable in itself) which can be furthered with a bachelor's of applied sciences in aviation technology, and they offer three branches of this bs, one of which is "advanced maintenance." this degree is my primary concern.
My question is this: would this other school (no doubt more expensive, regardless of nonresident status) be worth the time if I wanted to specialize in aviation maintenance? So far, this semester's re-take of calculus isn't good. I know this because the first exam, which should have been review from my failed semester, netted me 25 of 50 available points.
This is a big decision, and if it smells right I might end up enrolling as soon as this summer in the aviation-ready school, instead of wasting 4 years on a more general bs that distances me from aircraft.
I'm 19 years old, attending my second semester of college, and I'm not satisfied that I made the right decisions.
First, a little background. I was a lego kid. I'm here, right? It all stemmed from innate ability to disassemble household appliances as quickly as possible. It was always great frustration for my Dad, who often didn't appreciate seeing his old pioneer in pieces on the floor.
Flash forward, and I'm a senior in high school, with the opportunity to learn to fly under cfi-mei don g, in a 2005 g1000-equipped c172sp. From what he could tell, it was the first program in the nation that offered highschool students actual logged flight time, Instead of just the ground-type classes (which he had previously taught) and this really changed my ideas about a career. No longer did I want to be a chemical engineer, I wanted to work in the aviation industry. Really, I want to work with and be knowledgeable concerning all types of powerplants and mechanical systems (and I guess learning about these new computer screens wouldn't hurt)
so now I'm into a pre-engineering program for the second semester, with initial plans to transfer into rolla's engineering college and specialize in mechanical apps. My first semester was not so good - I got good grades at first, especially in chem, but calculus was crippling. I tested above the refresher math course with act scores, and I have never had any trigonometry classes. Ultimately, I failed calculus and got a c in chem (because of a little slump of educational depression, translation: Lazy) and my gpa is now a 1.7.
This makes my scholarship (~$13,000 over 4 years) funding seem dicey, since they require a 3.0. Their holding period will last until the next fall semester, however, so I have this semester and all summer to make up my grades.
Now the problem:
I don't want to be an engineer, after finding out from my "career advisor" that my intended career path was not what this engineering degree would point towards. That probably didn't help me motivate myself to succeed, and neither did his hearty laughter when I told him I was having trouble in calculus.
Appointed advisors are awesome. Anyhow, I have recently looked into an out-of-state school ($$$$$$^2 if they don't have some kind of shared-border agreement with mo) that has a two-year a&p certification (not incredibly valuable in itself) which can be furthered with a bachelor's of applied sciences in aviation technology, and they offer three branches of this bs, one of which is "advanced maintenance." this degree is my primary concern.
My question is this: would this other school (no doubt more expensive, regardless of nonresident status) be worth the time if I wanted to specialize in aviation maintenance? So far, this semester's re-take of calculus isn't good. I know this because the first exam, which should have been review from my failed semester, netted me 25 of 50 available points.
This is a big decision, and if it smells right I might end up enrolling as soon as this summer in the aviation-ready school, instead of wasting 4 years on a more general bs that distances me from aircraft.